| 					4.  If you want to leave certain 					pieces of property to certain family members or friends, 					you’ll need their addresses and phone numbers.  Now is the 					time to ask them what they might want. 					You may want to prepare a										power of attorney and 					a  					living trust at the same 					time you create a will.  Power of attorney gives someone 					else the power to handle your affairs such as paying your 					bills if you become too sick to do it yourself.  Usually 					your spouse gets power of attorney. 					A  															living will is often confused with a 					living trust, but they are two very different things.  										                     A living will gives your doctors the power to withdraw life 					support if you are dying and may tell them not to use 					extraordinary means to keep you alive when there is no 					longer any hope.  A living trust has to do with your 					property. 					Most wills have six basic parts. 					Part 1 identifies the 					person making the will, his or her spouse and 										issue 					(issue means all biological and adopted children and their 					children and their children’s children, etc).																				                     In Part 1 					you’ll find the famous phrase: “My Last Will and Testament,” 					meaning that this is now the last one, and any other ones 					are now no good. 					Part 2 directs your executor to pay off 					all your debts and taxes. These include the ones that recur 					like your mortgage, and all one-time expenses like your 					funeral. |                     Part 3 is where you 					actually give away your possessions.  Nine times out of ten 					everything goes to your spouse, but many people do want to 					direct certain things to certain people.  Here the language 					of the will is very important.										                     For example, if you leave 										your Chinese vase to Cousin Otto, and Cousin Otto dies 					before you, then the vase goes to Cousin Otto’s kids. 					If you want to keep it in 					your family, you have to word it such that if your cousin is 					dead, the vase becomes part of your 										residuary estate 					(see Part 4). 					Part 4 is about your residuary estate 					or everything that’s left after you pay expenses and debts, 					and give away all the stuff from Part 3 of your will.  Most 					people leave their estate to their spouses. If the spouse is 					dead, then it usually goes in equal parts to their children.					 					Part 5 is where you appoint your 					executor.  Usually it reads: “If so-and-so can not serve as 					my executor, then I appoint so-and-so.”   					Part 6 has the names and signatures of 					your witnesses, who are never people mentioned in the will.  					If using a lawyer, he or she may have office staff sign 					the will, and then he or she will notarize it.   															                     You should update your will from time 										to time.  If you move to a new state, if you get a divorce, 					if your children’s guardians can’t serve, or if your 					possessions or wealth change, it’s time to change that will. |